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John Ferris (Choral Conductor, Organ)

Born: July 29, 1926 - East Lansing, Michigan, USA
Died: August. 1, 2008 - Great Barrington, Massachusetts, USA

The American choral conductor and organist, John Raymond Ferris, took piano lessons as a child as well as a few organ lessons, and heard the latter instrument played in local movie theaters. He was drafted at 18 and stationed at Fort Riley, Kan. As he described in an interview with the Globe, "It was a cavalry post and we were supposed to learn how to work with horses and mules for combat in Burma. To keep from going crazy, I started to take organ lessons again, and before long I had been invited to take over as post organist, and because at that age you don't realize what you don't know, I took on the choir as well." After the war, he attended Michigan State University, where he focused on music, and later did graduate work at Union Theological Seminary's School of Sacred Music.

John Ferris held a position for eight years as organist and choirmaster at a church in Red Bank, New Jersey, but by age 31, he was offered the same post at Harvard's Memorial Church. He said yes. As soon as he arrived, Ferris made a major change to the core composition of the chorus. It had been an all-male group but he insisted on building a balanced four-part ensemble, with women singing alongside men. He also oversaw a new edition of the university's hymnbook, taking a historically minded approach that restored the original couplings of particular texts with their associated hymn melodies. The church's organ needed updating as well, and Ferris spearheaded the campaign to replace the old Aeolian-Skinner instrument with a large tracker organ built by Charles Fisk of Gloucester.

At Harvard, where John Ferris conducted the Harvard University Choir from 1958 to 1990 and taught hymnology in the Divinity School, his quiet charisma and his unyielding devotion to the music at hand inspired many students through the years. Under his direction, the group became known for its gleaming ensemble sound and its impeccable musicality - qualities that were consistently on display not only at special performances but also in the chorus's contributions to daily church services.

Over the years at Harvard, John Ferris's interest in 17th-century music deepened and he became a devoted exponent of the music of Heinrich Schütz, paving the way for a citywide burst of interest in H. Schütz' music. He programmed H. Schütz's works during his five years as music director of Cantata Singers, and gave two noteworthy H. Schütz concerts with the Harvard University Choir in 1972. Those programs started the choir on its path toward reaching a broader audience far beyond the university, though various rules at Harvard prevented the group from performing often outside of Memorial Church.

John Ferris was one of the first Boston-area musicians to focus intensely on early music, and he was particularly acclaimed for his interpretations of J.S. Bach. After his performance of J.S. Bach's St. John Passion (BWV 245) in 1990, Globe music critic Richard Dyer wrote that "Boston boasts no finer musician, and none is more widely loved." He added that Ferris "belongs in the rare company of musicians who give you not just something to hear, to think about, to feel, but something to keep and to cherish, something to live by." Beyond H. Schütz and J.S. Bach, Ferris was also praised as an excellent interpreter of George Frideric Handel. In 1987, he led the choir in a performance of the composer's oratorio "Saul," which Dyer praised in the Globe as "impeccably prepared, handsomely cast, conducted with style, insight, vigor, and emotion."

In working with students, John Ferris was known for achieving results without bullying singers or grandstanding. "There was no ego - it was just about finding the essence of the music, and drawing it out of people," said Mary Beekman, the director of Musica Sacra, who was deeply influenced by her experience singing in the choir. "With John, it was almost by the sheer force of his caring about the music that you came to care about it too, and you just didn't want to let him down."

After retiring from his post in 1990, John Ferris traveled widely as a guest lecturer. He also took over the directorship of the choir at the Congregational Church in Colebrook, Connecticut., close to his home in the Berkshires. Over the years, he performed as a concert organist throughout the USA and made his European concert debut in 1978 at La Basilique du Sacré Cour in Paris. Many heard in his organ playing the same kind of wise and insightful musicianship that distinguished his conducting.

John Ferris died on August 1, 2008 in Great Barrington. The cause was complications from Parkinson's disease, according to Nancy Granert, the organist in residence at Harvard's Memorial Church. He was 82 years old. He left his spouse and partner of 60 years, Herbert Burtis of Sandisfield, and four nieces.

Sources:
Obituary in The Boson Globe (Author: Jeremy Eichler, August 10, 2008)
Photo 02: Nancy Wilson
Bits & pieces from other websites
Contributed by
Aryeh Oron (June 2013)

John Ferris: Short Biography | Ensembles: Harvard University Choir | Cantata Singers
Bach Discography:
Recordings of Vocal Works
Bach Series:
Cantata Singers: Concert Series

Links to other Sites

John Ferris, 82, organist and choirmaster at Harvard (Boston)


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